PLA Videos

About the PLA and What we do

The Port of London Authority works to ensure navigational safety along the tidal Thames, sharing its marine, environmental, planning and other expertise to promote use of the river and safeguard its unique marine environment. The Thames is home to the UK’s second biggest port, busiest inland waterway for freight and passengers, and a centre for sporting events.
Our operations cover 95 miles of the River Thames. We work to keep commercial and leisure users safe, protect and enhance the environment and promote the use of the river for trade and travel.

Listing

Watch the launch of London Titan, the Port of London Authority’s (PLA) new £7 million ship which has been built to keep the Thames clear of obstructions, marked and safe for anyone to use. The is river is one of the busiest in the UK, and welcomes vessels from HMS Illustrious to Thames Clippers, cruise ships to rowing boats. The ship was launched at Manor Marine’s shipyard in Portland, Dorset on 21 February 2015.

New Year’s Eve is the busiest night of the year on the Thames for passenger boats, with many people getting afloat for a great view of the fireworks. The Port of London Authority co-ordinates river operations for the event, with two launches on the river closing it to traffic between Westminster Bridge and Charing Cross Bridge between 2340 on 31 December 2013 until 0020 on 1 January 2014. VTS Officers at our Thames Barrier Navigation Centre oversee the operation – this is their story of the night.

The PLA completed a programme of habitat and other improvements on Oliver’s Ait, an island on the Thames, just downriver of Kew Bridge. A valuable habitat for wildlife including bats and kingfishers, a survey of the site by London Wildlife Trust also found the rare swollen spire and Thames door snails.

The PLA completed a programme of habitat and other improvements on Oliver’s Ait, an island on the Thames, just downriver of Kew Bridge. A valuable habitat for wildlife including bats and kingfishers, a survey of the site by London Wildlife Trust also found the rare swollen spire and Thames door snails.

Richmond Lock and Weir is a half tide weir and lock, owned and operated by the Port of London Authority, the facility is used to maintain the upstream river level at no less than five feet and nine inches below datum line. A lock enables boats to continue travelling up or down river when the weirs are in place.

Find out about what happens on the tidal river Thames and the work of the Port of London Authority (PLA).
The river is home to: the UK's second biggest port; busiest inland waterway for freight and passengers; a major centre for rowing; and can be a stage for global events.
PLA operations to help keep the river safe include port control, providing ships' pilots, riverbed surveying, driftwood clearance and river traffic control for major events or large ship movements.

All about what happens on the tidal river Thames and the work of the Port of London Authority, in less than 90 seconds.
The busy Thames is home to: the UK's second biggest port; busiest inland waterway for freight and passengers; a major centre for rowing; and can be a stage for global events.